How To Play Bungie’s Marathon Game Series On Linux

Aleph One is an open-source re-implementation of the Marathon 2 gaming engine for Macintosh. Officially, Aleph One can play Marathon 1, Marathon 2, and Marathon Infinity. Additionally, the engine has the ability to play custom, fan-made versions of Bungie’s Marathon game series (aka scenarios).

The engine itself is not very demanding and can run on Linux systems with as little as 512 MB of RAM. Better yet, all three Marathon games are free to download!

Install Aleph One

Getting the Aleph One engine running isn’t easy, as the developers do not provide downloadable packages on the website. To install the software, choose your operating system from the list below and follow along.

Ubuntu/Debian

Ubuntu users looking to play Bungie’s Marathon series will need to install Aleph One by building it from source. Open up a terminal and install the necessary build dependencies. Then, skip to the generic instructions to learn how to build the game from source.

Arch Linux

Arch Linux users are in luck, as there are specific AUR snapshots for each of the Marathon games. To start the installation, open up a terminal window and use the Pacman package manager to sync the latest version of Git. Then, use Git to clone the game’s source files.

Once all of the individual AUR snapshots are downloaded, it’s time to being the installation process. The first step is to build and install the engine itself. Using the CD command, move the terminal into the alephone folder and generate a new package using makepkg.

Note: Aleph One may fail to install dependencies if they are outside of the AUR. To fix this, you’ll need to install them manually. Find more information about them here.

cd alephone
makepkg -si

With the base engine built and working, it’s safe to install the 3 Marathon games to Arch.

Fedora

Bungie’s game engine doesn’t have an official RPM for Fedora Linux users to install. Luckily, thanks to OpenSUSE it doesn’t matter. Start the installation in Fedora Linux by using the wget download tool to grab the latest version of Aleph One.

Now that the source code is done downloading, use the tar command and extract everything.

tar xjvf AlephOne-20150619.tar.bz2

Using the CD command, move into the source directory and run the configure command.

cd AlephOne-20150619
./configure

If everything looks good, run the make command.

make

Lastly, install the software with:

sudo make install

Set Up Scenarios

Before you can play any of Bungie’s Marathon games, you’ll need to set up the game files. Luckily, each game is open source and the files available freely on the internet. To download the game files, open up a terminal and use the wget downloading tool.

Play Bungie’s Marathon Games

Now that the Aleph One engine is installed, and the game files are in the correct data folders, it’s time to play the game. To Play any of the Marathon games, you’ll need torun the alephone command and specify the game’s data directory.

To play, follow the instructions below to launch any of the games via terminal.

Launch Marathon 1

alephone ~/Marathon-Games/Marathon-1

Launch Marathon 2

alephone ~/Marathon-Games/Marathon-2

Launch Marathon Infinity

alephone ~/Marathon-Games/Marathon-Infinity

Close any running instance of Aleph One on Linux by pressing the ESC button, then selecting the “quit” button.